| Geert Lovink on Thu, 18 Jun 2009 18:20:56 +0200 (CEST) |
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| <nettime> The Digital Given--10 Web 2.0 Theses by Ippolita, Geert Lovink & Ned Rossiter |
The Digital Given
10 Web 2.0 Theses by Ippolita, Geert Lovink & Ned Rossiter
0. The internet turns out to be neither the problem nor the solution
for the global recession. As an indifferent bystander it doesn't lend
itself easily as a revolutionary tool. The virtual has become the
everyday. The New Deal is presented as green, not digital. The digital
is a given. This low-key position presents an opportunity to rethink
the Web 2.0 hype. How might we understand our political, emotional and
social involvement in internet culture over the next few years?
1. News media is awash with 'economic crisis', indulging in its self-
generated spectacle of financial meltdown. Experts are mobilised, but
only to produce the drama of dissensus. Programmed disagreement is the
consensus of daily news. Crisis, after all, is the condition of
possibility for capitalism. Unlike the dotcom crash in 2000-2001, when
the collapse of high-tech stocks fueled the global recession, the
internet has so far managed to stay out of the blame game. Web 2.0
only suffers mild side effects from the odd collection of platforms
and services, from Google to Wikipedia, Photobucket, Craigslist,
MySpace, Facebook, Twitter, Habbo and so-called regional players such
as Baidu and 51.com. Despite its benign existence, there still is
hyper-growth wherever you look. Web 2.0 applications and platforms
remain 'new' but show a tendency to get lost inside the boring,
stressful and uncertain working life of the connected billions.
2. Social networks are technologies of entertainment and diffusion.
The social reality they create is real, but as a technology of
immediacy you can't get no satisfaction. We initially love them for
their distraction from the torture of now-time. Networking sites are
social drugs for those in need of the Human that is located elsewhere
in time or space. It is the pseudo Other that we are connecting to.
Not the radical Other or some real Other. We systematically explore
weakness and vagueness and are pressed to further enhance the
exhibition of the Self. 'I might know you (but I don't). Do you mind
knowing me?'. The pleasure principle of entertainment thus diffuses
social antagonisms – how does conflict manifest within the comfort
zones of social networks and their tapestries of auto-customisation?
The business-minded 'trust doctrine' has all but eliminated the open,
dirty internet forums. Most Web 2.0 are echo chambers of the same old
opinions and cultural patterns. As we can all witness, they are not
exactly hotbeds of alternative sub-culture. What's new are their
'social' qualities: the network is the message. What is created here
is a sense or approximation of the social. Social networks register a
'refusal of work'. But our net-time, after all, is another kind of
labour. Herein lies the perversity of social networks: however radical
they may be, they will always be data-mined. They are designed to be
exploited. Refusal of work becomes just another form of making a buck
that you never see.
3. Social networking sites are as much fashion victims as everything
else. They come and go. Their migration across space signals the
enculturisation of software. While Orkut disappeared in G8 countries,
it is still Big in Brazil. Is anyone still seriously investing in real
estate in Second Life? What the online world needs is sustainable
social relations. The moving herds that go from one server to the next
merely demonstrate an impulsive grazing mentality: once the latest
widgets are installed, it is time to move on. Sustainability is
connected to scaleability. Here, we see lessons from the major social
movements over the last 50 years. The force of accumulated social-
political desires manifest, eventually, in national and global forums
that permeate back into policy discourse and social practice: think
March on Washington, 1963 (Black Civil Rights), Rio, 1992 (Earth
Summit), Porto Alegre, 2001 (World Social Forum), Geneva and Tunis,
2003-2005 (World Summit on the Info-Society). None of these examples
are exempt from critique. We note them here to signal the relationship
between sustainability and scalar transformation. We are familiar with
formats such as barcamps, unconferencing and have participated in DIY
techno-workshops at those seasonal media arts festivals. But these are
hardly instances of sustainability. Their temporality of tinkering is
governed by the duration of the event. True, there is occasionally
resonance back in the local hack-lab, but such practices are exclusive
to techno-secret societies, not the networked masses. Social
networking sites are remarkable for their capacity to scale. Their
weakness is their seeming incapacity to effect political change in any
substantive way. The valorisation of citizen-journalism is not the
same as radical intervention, and is better understood as symptomatic
of the structural logic of outsourcing media production and election
campaign management.
4. From social to socialism is a small step for humankind – but a big
step for the Western subject. What makes the social attractive, and
socialism so old school and boring? What is the social anyway? We have
to be aware that such postmodern academic language games do not deepen
our understanding of the issues, nor widen our political fantasies. We
need imagination, but only if it illuminates concepts that transform
concrete conditions. The resurrection of the social after its
disappearance is not an appealing slogan. Some ideas have an almost
direct access to our body. Others remain dead. This in particular
counts for insider jargon such as rent, multitude, common, commons and
communism. There's a compulsion to self-referentiality here that's not
so different from the narcissistic default of so many blogs. What,
then, are the collective concepts of the social networked masses? For
now, they are engineered from the top-down by the corporate
programmers, or they are outsourced to the world of widgets. Tag,
Connect, Friend, Link, Share, Tweet. These are not terms that signal
any form of collective intelligence, creativity or networked
socialism. They are directives from the Central Software Committee.
«Participation» in «social networks» will no longer work, if it ever
did, as the magic recipe to transform tired and boring individuals
into cool members of the mythological Collective Intelligence. If
you're not an interesting individual, your participation is not really
interesting. Data clouds, after all, are clouds: they fade away.
Better social networks are organized networks involving better
individuals – it's your responsibility, it's your time. What is needed
is an invention of social network software where everybody is a
concept designer. Let's kill the click and unleash a thousand million
tiny tinkerers!
5. We are addicted to ghettoes, and in so doing refuse the antagonism
of 'the political'. Where is the enemy? Not on Facebook, where you can
only have 'friends'. What Web 2.0 lacks is the technique of
antagonistic linkage. Instead, we are confronted with the Tyranny of
Positive Energy. Life only consists of uplifting experiences.
Depression is not a design principle. Wikipedia's reliance on 'good
faith' and its policing of protocols quite frequently make for a
depressing experience in the face of an absence of singular style.
There ain't no 'neutral point of view'. This software design principle
merely reproduces the One Belief System. Formats need to be
transformed if they are going to accommodate the plurality of
expression of networked life. Templates function as zones of
exclusion. But strangely, they also exclude the conflict of the
border. The virus is the closest thing to conflict online. But viruses
work in invisible ways and function as a generator of service labour
for the computer nerd who comes in and cleans your computer.
6. The critique of simulation falls short here. There is nothing
'false' about the virtuality of social networking sites. They are
about as real it gets these days. Stability accumulates for those
hooked to networks. Things just keep expanding. More requests. More
friends. More time for social-time. With the closure of factories
comes the opening of data-mines. Privacy is so empty of curiosity that
we are compelled to slap it on our Wall for all to see. If we are
lucky, a Friend refurbishes it with a comment. And if you are feeling
cheeky, then Throw A Sheep! You would be hard-pressed to notice any
substantive change. But you will be required to do never-ending
maintenance work to manage all your data feeds and updates. That'll
subtract a bit of time from your daily routine.
7. The Network will not be Revolutionized. What does this mean for
Indymedia 2.0? The question of why indymedia.org failed and did not
further develop into an active and open social networking site or
clearly take up a position in the Web 2.0 debate is something that
needs to be addressed (see nettime debate of May 2009). Have media
activists already learnt enough of the Brechtian Indymedia Lehrstueck
that started in the late nineties? Is global branding and branching,
as in the case of Indymedia (one name, often similar design, sharing
of servers, some syndication of content, etc.), still as important as
it used to be? Indymedia met the challenge of scaleability in amazing
ways only to discover its limits. Contamination seems key for
transnational social-political networks. As do regular face-to-face
meetings. Let your network connect with the concrete and adaptation
and transformation will undoubtedly kick in. Then try reconnecting
across networks (and other institutional and organizational forms) on
the global scale. Conflict will already have multiplied and the
primary condition of sustainability will be underway.
8. Web 2.0 is not for free. 'Free as in free beer' is not like 'free
as in freedom'. Open does not equal free. These days 'free' is just
another word for service economies. The linux fiefdom know that all
too well. We need to question naive campaigns that merely promote
'free culture' without questioning the underlying parasitic economy
and the 'deprofessionalization' of cultural work. Pervasive profiling
is the cost of this opening to 'free market values'. As users and
prosumers we are limited by our capacity as data producers. Our tastes
and preferences, our opinions and movements are the market price to
pay. At present, Facebook's voluntary and enthusiastic auto-filing
system on a mass scale represents the high point of this strategy. But
we cannot succumb to the control paranoia and to the logic of fear.
Let's inject more kaos in it! So what if you have your anti-whatever
Facebook group? What does it change other than expanding your number
of friends? Is deleting the radical gesture of 2009? Why not come up a
more subversive and funny, anti-cyclical act? Are you also looking for
rebel tactical tools?
9. Soon the Web 2.0 business model will be obsolete. It is based on
the endless growth principle, pushed by the endless growth of
consumerism. The business model still echoes the silly 90s dotcom
model: if growth stagnates, it means the venture has failed and needs
to be closed down. Seamless growth of customised advertising is the
fuel of this form of capitalism, decentralized by the user-prosumer.
Mental environment pollution is parallel to natural environment
pollution. But our world is finished (limited). We have to start
elaborating appropriate technologies for a finite world. There is no
exteriority, no other worlds (second, third, fourth worlds) where we
can dump the collateral effects of insane development. We know that
Progress is a bloodthirsty god that extracts a heavy human sacrifice.
A good end cannot justify a bad means. On the contrary, technologies
are means that have to justify the end of collective freedom. No
sacrifice will be tolerated: martyrs are not welcome. Neither are
heroes.
10. 'Better a complex identity than an identity complex'. We need to
promote peer-education that shifts the default culture of auto-
formation to the nihilist pleasure of hacking the system. Personal
exhibition on web 2.0 social networks resembles the discovery of
sexuality. Anxiety over masturbation meets digital narcissism
(obsessive touching up of personal profiles) and digital voyeurism
(compulsive viewing of other's profiles, their list of friends,
secrets, etc.). To avoid the double trap of blind technophilia and
luddite technophobia, we have to develop complex digital identities.
They have to answer to individual desires and satisfy multiple needs.
Open-ID are a good starting point. 'Steal my profile'. It's time to
remix identity. Anonymity is a good alternative to the pressures of
the control society, but there must be alternatives on offer. One
strategy could be to make the one ('real') identity more complex and,
where possible, contradictory. But whatever your identify might be, it
will always be harvested. If you must participate in the accumulation
economy for those in control of the data mines, then the least you can
do is Fake Your Persona.
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